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    In the movie Awakenings‚ a psychiatrist takes an interest in the patients that are in a statue-esque state. After much research and experimentation‚ he concludes that the patients were misdiagnosed‚ and actually have a severe case of Parkinson’s disease. Parkinson’s disease is a progressive nervous disease associated with the destruction of brain cells that produce dopamine and characterized by muscular tremor‚ slowing of movement‚ partial facial paralysis‚ peculiarity of gait and posture‚ and weakness

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    character plays a pivotal role. Then write an essay in which you explain how the character can be viewed as morally ambiguous and why his or her moral ambiguity is significant to the work as a whole. Avoid mere plot summary. The Awakening: Moral Ambiguity In The Awakening‚ Edna finds herself unhappy living in a patriarchal society‚ and gives up her family and life to be content with herself. Her moral ambiguity can be compared to that of many women who sparked the early days of the women’s suffrage

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    Revival in History

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    had a chilling effect on spiritual movements‚ but this was countered by the Methodist revival of John Wesley‚ Charles Wesley and George Whitefield in England and Daniel Rowland‚ Howel Harris and William Williams‚ Pantycelyn in Wales and the Great Awakening in America prior to the Revolution. A similar (but smaller scale) revival in Scotland took place at Cambuslang‚ then a village and is known as the Cambuslang Work.[1] A new fervor spread within the Anglican Church at the end of the century‚ when

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    The Great Awakening of 1735-1745 was a reaction to a decline in piety and a carelessness of morals within the Congregational Churches of New England. Although the Great Awakening stimulated dramatic conversions and an increase in church membership‚ it also provoked conflicts and divisions within the established church. This striking revival of religious piety and its emphasis on salvation ultimately transformed the religious order of Connecticut. The decline in piety among the second generation of

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    Changing Perspective Creates Awakening Change. It is a concept often discussed as being an inevitable part of human life‚ something people has experienced numerous of times‚ and will continue to experience throughout their lives. Change comes in many forms and has a range of effects‚ which are either negative or positive on those who experience it and respond to it. Change‚ particularly in relation to the topic ¡°Changing perspective creates awakening¡±‚ is a view that is repeatedly explored and

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    journalist‚ and even as a musician. There can be no denying his hard work and his contributions to each and every one of those fields; yet the one thing that makes him stand out from all the others was his input and leadership during the First Great Awakening of 1740-1742. Around the time of Edwards delivering this speech‚ there was a great depravity of true religious meaning and accountability. There was only one practiced religion during this period of time‚ called the Church of England. All other

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    Alexa Roumeliotis 9/25/15 Practice: Document Based Questions The Great Awakening and the Enlightenment both produced writers and thinkers who argued for the implementation of a republican government. Writers such as Locke‚ Montesquieu‚ Edwards and Whitefield‚ all had a role in promoting republican values‚ which in turn influenced the establishment of a republican government. John Locke‚ an English philosopher was a major part of the growth of the rebublican view during the Enlightenment era.1

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    In 19th century‚ the society was dominated by male. Edna Pontellier was the wife of Mr. Portlier who was a creole. In French upper class society‚ the purpose of life for female was taught to be fond of their husbands and children. Woman at that time never lived for themselves. Mrs. Pontellier’s friend‚ Adele Ratignolle‚ was considered as the perfect woman in the society‚ because she was a great woman who treated her children better than herself. After party‚ Adna first learned how to swim. She

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    The film showed how desperate one could be when they have no love. Love is something that cannot be taken lightly. However‚ where is the defining line between love and lust. Baines in the film appeared to covet and lust after Ada. Furthermore‚ Ada appeared out of touch with reality after her incident. Ada longs to escape perhaps the pain she has endured in her life. However‚ Baines in my view takes advantage of the situation. As at first‚ he bribes Ada knowing she will do anything to have access

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    The Revivalist Movement

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    the Second Great Awakening‚ Charles Finney‚ wrote this in his book‚ Lectures on the Revivals of Religion‚ in 1835. Finney was a firm believer in the revivalist movement of the mid-1800s‚ and helped influence many others across the country to join the Christian faith. Between 1800 and 1850‚ the Christian population in the United States more than doubled‚ thanks in large parts to the efforts of the revivalists. But why were these revivals so popular? Why did this new Great Awakening influence other

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